So is it penny wise and dollar stoopid (or the other way around) if you pay thousands and thousands of dollars for ski gear, hours and hours of research, perfect access vehicles, tires, passes, outerwear, make bad life decisions, etc to slide on snow and then go half-assed on keeping where the rubber meets the road anything but ideal by going cheap or simply being lazy?
Some random thoughts:
-conventional wisom used to be that it'd take a minimum of 20 wax cycles to 'season' bases to glide at their optimal level. Once you get that optimal glide, your waxing frequency may be able to be reduced.
-proper base structure is part of the mix. Brushing frees the structure of wax increase the glide the first run onward.
-A clothes iron isn't beveled/rounded around the edges like a wax iron IIRC. You could ease the edges with a file, then stone/diamond. Use an IR thermometer to check iron base temps
-rub-ons or liquid waxes generally are easy on, easy off without adding heat. Ironing after application is best. If no iron is available for mid-day adds, you can try letting the bases face the sun to warm, expand and possibly get absorbed. A roto-cork can create friction heat to help increase durability. Use over a harder base wax.
-err towards harder/colder waxes based on the nightime low (snow temp) vs a warner wax base on air temps for increased durability.
-optimal glide does make for easier and better turns.....for those who actually like to make turns and carve
-run-outs, slogs, traversing & cat tracks really benefit by proper waxing.
Bookmarks